Posted: 2023-02-22 17:56:10

Walking through his home, Max Robertson has to crouch down despite the high ceilings.

Through every room, there's about 1.5 metres of silt and mud. It's hardened in some places; in others, you still sink in.

Max gave up on gumboots salvaging his trailer out the back. The thick, wet mud in the shed was above his knees.

Man in blue shirt, shorts and a hat walking through mud.
Max Robertson's shed is still full of wet mud. Trying to salvage his trailer and motorbikes, he gave up on his gumboots.(ABC News: Kathleen Calderwood)

The floodwater came so high that the light fittings are full of silt. A hanging plant in his room somehow looks almost untouched, but right next to it is his mattress, covered in mud.

"It's not often you can walk over someone's bed in your muddy gumboots," he laughs, after pointing out his "new back door" – the window they had to smash in the granny flat out the back where his dad lives, in order to get back into the house after the flood.

Damaged furniture in a room due to floodwaters.
The light fittings were full of silt after the floods.(ABC News: Kathleen Calderwood)

Early last week — as Cyclone Gabrielle was hitting New Zealand's North Island — Max was woken in the early hours.

He said the floodwater was only about ankle height, but by the time he woke his father Hector and retrieved their dogs, he was swimming.

Hector and the animals saw out the storm on the second floor of the neighbouring house — where Max's uncle lives.

Two cars and a house damaged by a cyclone.
Max Robertson saw out the cyclone on the roof of this house with his neighbours.(ABC News: Kathleen Calderwood)

But Max went to the other neighbours to help them. They ended up on the roof for hours.

"Just as we were getting on the roof I heard a lady come past screaming; I had no idea where she was or what happened," Max recalled.

"As soon as we got some form of light, I managed to see her hands holding on to something.

"So once I thought I could get in there and help her, I swum across and got her.

"She was 70, she was blue, so I took my clothes off and just got her as warm as possible."

Two men standing on top of a roof with floodwaters around them. One is wearing hi-vis.
Max was eventually rescued by locals in a boat. (Supplied)

They were later rescued by some locals in a boat, Max said. They've now been nicknamed the Navy seals.

"She's right now, she came out [on Monday] to see me, which was pretty cool," Max said.

"Her and her family — that was pretty neat."

'We just had to dig our way in'

Max, his father and a group of friends and family have been coming out daily to salvage what they can — motorbikes, trailers, a gun safe.

Looking at the place, it's hard to imagine how they would've known where to start.

Bulldozer and a car covered in dirt outside a house.
Max Robertson's house.(ABC News: Kathleen Calderwood)

"We just had to dig our way in, I think," he laughed.

"We got the trucks out, that was the first thing … got a few things out the front of that shed, but that's fully buried so we gave up there.

"It's at a point now I think where we've got most things we can salvage."

Three men standing on sand.
Hector and Max Robertson have been getting help from friends and strangers.(ABC News: Kathleen Calderwood)

Despite everything he's been through, Max is keen to rebuild in the same spot — if he's allowed to.

"I'd probably still live here, I'd still build here," he said.

"People probably say I'm crazy but this house has survived the earthquake, [Cyclone] Bola — it's a freak storm."

'Years and years to recover'

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